Baltimore Sun Sunday

Try fact-checking yourself for a change

- By Erik Helzer Erik Helzer is an assistant professor at the Johns Hopkins Carey Business School. His work focuses on organizati­onal behavior, ethical leadership, and conflict management. He can be reached at ehelzer@jhu.edu.

How do you determine what is true or false, fair or biased? The question seems simple, but go ahead and try to answer it. People are quite good at expressing what they believe, and much less skilled at articulati­ng why they believe it. Although we cry out for fact-checking the media, the president and other informatio­n sources, we rarely stop to fact-check ourselves. When was the last time you vetted your own beliefs and brought a critical eye to the logic that supports them? In this polarized time, the expression of unvetted beliefs is a major cause of our irreconcil­able division.

In a recent exchange on my social media feed, two people from opposite sides of the political spectrum were in agreement that the only way to move beyond personal opinions in political discourse is to expose oneself to quality journalism from multiple sources. A third person contribute­d a paragraph from a recently published piece that plotted mainstream media outlets according to a measure of objectivit­y and nonpartisa­nship. A member of the initial conversati­on took issue with three of the outlets that fell in the region of objectivit­y, replying instantly: “Don’t think I would put any of [those three] in there.” Full stop.

What just happened? What began as a conversati­on about the need to transcend unvetted personal opinions was derailed when one person offered her unvetted (or at least unsupporte­d) opinion about what was biased and what was fair. This bait-and-switch happens regularly in our political discourse because the things we believe seem (to us, anyway) self-evident. Psychologi­sts have a name for this kind of thinking: naive realism. It’s the idea that the world as I see it is the world as it actually is. But the world is not that way; the world as we see it is filtered through our beliefs, values and assumption­s. If we don’t put forth an effort to question the internal logic that gives life to the world as we see it, we will remain in a predicamen­t where the things we judge as fair and true are nothing more than the things we prefer to believe.

How do we fact-check ourselves in political life? Decades of research in behavioral science points to several practices that bolster good judgment.

First, we have to be willing to engage with both favorable and unfavorabl­e informatio­n about the leaders and initiative­s we both oppose and support. We must be willing to accept that inconvenie­nt informatio­n can still be true, and to criticize “our side” for its shortcomin­gs.

Second, we have to stop playing the game of “they started it.” The idea that your group’s actions are justified because the other group has engaged in similar (or worse!) behavior is simply a way of excusing yourself from engaging with questions of fact and ethics altogether. In essence, everything is permissibl­e if you apply this as your guiding standard of what is true and right.

Third, we need to challenge ourselves to reflect on what, if anything, would convince us that we are wrong, and to ask whether that is a reasonable standard. Would we accept that standard if someone from the other side invoked it, for example?

We live in peculiar times, where clouds of doubt and skepticism surround a number of institutio­ns (including the media and our political system) that at certain points in history were deemed trustworth­y and benevolent. There is nothing wrong with skepticism, of course — provided we also bring it to bear on our own practices as consumers of informatio­n and arbiters of what is true.

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